Should young women who aren’t ready to have children have their eggs extracted and frozen as an “insurance policy” for future motherhood? Several recent media features seem to be promoting egg freezing, with little or no mention of the risks involved for women who undergo egg retrieval procedures or for the children that might be born as a result.

A January 23 article in Newsweek / The Daily Beast leads with Diane Sawyer encouraging young women who work for her to freeze their eggs and is illustrated with glamorous photos of celebrities who have themselves used egg freezing, egg donors, or surrogates. The article is unabashedly enthusiastic about egg freezing, but makes no mention at all of the significant down sides.

A CNN special report, titled Baby Quest, features an inside look at the vitrification process behind freezing eggs. The report encourages women who are concerned with their fertility to consider taking the leap by stimulating the growth of as many eggs as possible in their 20s and 30s, and freezing them in time.

And last week the Huffington Post published a first-person account of a 34-year-old woman freezing her eggs to safeguard her future fertility. She encourages more women to start talking about egg freezing, but within the article itself there is no discussion of the relevant risk factors women might consider before opting in.

While the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) clearly states that all egg freezing should be considered experimental, this recent media coverage has sent a different but also clear message: egg freezing can prevent infertility – and you need it as an “insurance policy.”

Noyes and her Langone partner, Dr. James Grifo, were also featured in the recent CNN segment, which is light on information and heavy on infomercial. Their comments neglected any of the risks associated with egg retrieval or freezing. Perhaps this is unsurprising in light of Noyes’ comment in Nature last August that the experimental label should be eliminated. “The change in perception," she says, “will make freezing more widely available and advance the field.”

One has to wonder whether the incentive to “advance the field” might be tied to egg freezing’s $15,000 price tag, and to the new business opportunities opened by a procedure that can be marketed to large numbers of young women rather than only to people with medically known fertility problems.

There are good reasons that egg freezing has been deemed experimental. ASRM’s focus was on the unpredictability of successful pregnancies initiated with embryos made from thawed eggs, and on the lack of research about the effects of the procedure on children born from frozen eggs. As ASRM Practice Committee Chair Samantha Pfeifer pointed out, “Some of the chemicals used in the freezing process are toxic to embryos, and no one knows how much the eggs absorb. Moreover, there has been no systematic follow-up of children born from frozen eggs.”

In addition, it’s important to consider the short-term and long-term risks of egg extraction, which are known to be significant but are also under-studied and under-reported. If the recent spate of media treatments is any indication, many women who consider egg extraction – whether for immediate fertility treatment, possible future fertility treatment, or to sell their eggs – will remain unaware of these risks.